Chapter 6 Electronic Structure of Atoms is responsible for ...rzellmer/chem1250/...14. 15. b)...

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Chapter 6 Electronic Structure of Atoms The number & arrangement of e - in an atom is responsible for its chemical behavior I) The Wave Nature of Light A) Electro magnetic Radiation Radiant Energy light, X-rays, UV, microwaves, etc. All move at the speed of light, c = 2.99792 x 10 8 m/s have wavelike characteristics 1

Transcript of Chapter 6 Electronic Structure of Atoms is responsible for ...rzellmer/chem1250/...14. 15. b)...

Page 1: Chapter 6 Electronic Structure of Atoms is responsible for ...rzellmer/chem1250/...14. 15. b) Excited States n > 1 higher energy less neg. E, less stable inc. distance from nucleus

Chapter 6

Electronic Structure of Atoms

The number & arrangement of e- in an atomis responsible for its chemical behavior

I) The Wave Nature of Light

A) Electromagnetic Radiation

Radiant Energy

light, X-rays, UV, microwaves, etc.

All move at the speed of light,

c = 2.99792 x 108 m/s

have wavelike characteristics1

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λ, wavelength distance betweensuccessive peaks

ν, frequency number of completewavelengths or cycleswhich pass a given pointper second

amplitude height of peak - related

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to intensity of radiation

long lowwavelength frequency

short highwavelength frequency

1ν %

λ

cν = or ν C λ = c

λ

units for ν

s!1 ; cycles/s ; hertz, Hz3

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X- rays visible IR microwave radio

λ (m) 10-9 10-7 10-5 10-2 102

ν (s-1) 1017 1015 1013 1010 106

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II) Quantized Energy and Photons

A) Plank’s Theory

Energy changes are quantized

- discrete energy changes

ΔE = n h ν n = 1, 2, 3, 4, ...

Planck’s constant

h = 6.63 x 10!34 JCs,

Smallest increment of energy, at agiven frequency, is termed aquantum of energy

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B) Photoelectric Effect

A minimum freq. of light shiningon a metal surface causes it to emit e-

Einstein: energy is a stream of particle like energy packets called photons

- radiant energy is quantized

h cEphoton = h ν =

λ

high ν (low λ) | high E

low ν (high λ) | low E

Note : duality of light - behaves both as a wave and particle

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1) Ex: A laser emits a signal with awavelength of 351 nm. Calculatethe energy of a photon of thisradiation.

h cE = h ν = -------

λ

(6.63 x 10!34 Js)(3.00 x 108 m/s)= ---------------------------------------

3.51 x 10!7 m

= 5.67 x 10!19 J

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III) Line Spectra and the Bohr Model

A) Line Spectra

1) White light passing through aprism results in band called a

continuous spectrum (rainbow)

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2) monochromatic light

Light with a single wavelength

- lasers

3) Line Spectra

discharge tube - atom absorbs energy& it can later emit it as light

Passed through a prism see aseries of narrow colored lines(specific λ’s)

Line Spectrum

Each line associated with a particular energy and color

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Different elements give different &distinctive line spectra

- characteristic of a particularelement

- use to identify elements

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B) Rydberg Equation

Wavelengths of lines in hydrogenspectrum given by,

1 1 1 = RH !

λ ‰ n12 n2

2 n2 > n1

Rydberg Constant

RH = 1.097 x 107 m!1

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B) Bohr Model

1) Energy Levels & Orbits

e- is restricted to certain energylevels corresponding to sphericalorbits, w. certain radii, about thenucleus

r = n2 a0

1En = ! h c C RH ( )

n2

n = principle quantum number

n = 1, 2, 3, ..., 4

Bohr radius:

a0 = 5.292 x 10!11 m = 0.5292 D

h c C RH = 2.180 x 10!18 J13

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a) Ground State

e- in n = 1 orbitclosest to nucleus

largest value of 1/n2

most negative E

( Lowest energy level

Note: most neg. E representsmost stable state

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b) Excited States

n > 1

higher energy

less neg. E, less stable

inc. distance from nucleus

r % n2

c) Zero-Point of Energy

n = 4

e- completely separatedfrom nucleus

1E4 = ! h c C RH ( ) = 0

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2) Energy Transitions

a) Absorption of Energy

e- absorbs energy

- jumps to higher energy levels, farther from nucleus

- Excited State

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b) Emission of Energy - light

e- “falls” to lower level

- emits the energy diff. as a quantum of light,

a photon

h cEphoton = ! ΔEemission = h ν =

λ18

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c) Energy Changes

Energy diff. between orbits

! h c C RH ! h c C RH ΔE = Ef ! Ei = ! nf

2 ni2

1 1 ΔE = ! h c C RH ( ! ) nf

2 ni2

1 1 ΔE = ! 2.180 x 10!18 J ( ! ) nf

2 ni2

1) nf > ni

ΔE > 0, E inc.

Absorption

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2) nf < ni

ΔE < 0, E dec.

Emission

3) nf = 4

complete removal of e-

Ionization

H (g) H+ (g) + e-

ni = 1 nf = 4

1 ΔE = h c C RH ( ) = 2.180 x 10!18 J 12

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d) Energy of a Photon

Energy of a photon emittedwhen e- “drops” to a lowerenergy level is related to freq.(wavelength) of radiation

h cEphoton = ! ΔEem = h ν =

λ

1 1 ν = c C RH ( ! ) nf

2 ni2

or

1 1 1 = RH ( ! ) λ nf

2 ni2

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e) Ex : Calc. the wavelength of aline in the visible spectrum forwhich ni = 3.

1 1 1 = RH ( ! ) λ nf

2 ni2

Balmer Series (visible):

nf = 2

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IV) Wave Behavior of Matter

A) de Broglie

Matter should have wave prop.

For photons:

h cEphoton = h ν =

λ

From Einstein:

E = m c2

h λ =

m c

wavelength for photon traveling at cwith an effective mass, m

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B) de Broglie Wavelength for Particles

h λ =

m v

v = velocity of the particle

h (6.63 x 10!34 JCs) is extremelysmall so λ is too small formacroscopic particles.

λ can only be detected forparticles w. very small mass,

i.e. e- (m = 9.11 x 10!28 g)

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1) Ex 1: Calculate the de Brogliewavelength for a 907.2 kg carmoving at a speed of 96.6 km/hr.

(6.63 x 10!34 JCs)λ =

(907.2 kg) (26.83 m/s)

= 2.72 x 10!38 m

2) Ex 2: Calculate the de Brogliewavelength for an electronmoving at a speed of 3 x 106 m/s.

(6.63 x 10!34 JCs)λ =

(9.11 x 10!31 kg) (3 x 106 m/s)

= 2.43 x 10!10 m (0.243 nm)

X-rays26

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C) Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle

The wave-particle duality of mattermakes it impossible to preciselymeasure both the position andmomentum of an object.

Δx = uncertainty in position

Δp = uncertainty in momentum (mv)

hΔx C Δp $

Limit on simultaneously measuringposition and momentum (speed).

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V) Quantum Mechanics

Impose wave properties on e-

A) Schrödinger’s Wave Equation

Total energy of H-atom issum of K.E. and P.E.

Time-Independent Sch. Eqn.:(in one dimension)

£2 d2 ψ(x) ! ---- ----------- + V(x) ψ(x) = E ψ(x) 2m d x 2

K.E. P.E. Total E

£ = h/2π

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1) Wave Functions

Get a series of solutionsto the wave eqn.

wave functions, ψ

Each ψ corresponds to a specificenergy & describes a region aboutthe nucleus, an orbital, in which ane! w. that energy may be found

ψ has no direct physical meaning

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Can only determine the probabilityof finding e! in a certain region ofspace at a given instant,

ψ2 probability density

Electron density

Greater where e! spendsmore of its time.

Probability of finding an e! ishigh in regions of high e! density

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B) Orbitals & Quantum Numbers

ψ represents an orbital and has 3characteristic quantum numbersassociated with it,

n R mR

energy shape orientation and of andistance orbitalfrom nucleus

The first 3 arise naturally fromthe solution of the Sch. Eqn.

There is a 4th quantum no.

ms : spin31

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1) Principal quantum number, n

Determines:

- energy level

- average distance from nucleus

- Identifies the shell

n = 1, 2, 3, 4, .....

Larger n A farther shell is from nucleus & higher energy

Max. no. of e! in shell = 2n2

n = 1 2(1)2 = 2 e!

n = 2 2(2)2 = 8 e!

n = 3 2(3)2 = 18 e!

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2) Azimuthal q. n. , R

(Angular Momentum q.n.)

identifies subshell (energy sublevels)

defines shape of orbital

# subshells in a shell = n

R = 0, 1, 2, .... (n-1)

Subshell designated by letters:

R = 0 1 2 3 4 .... s p d f g

#e! insubshell 2 6 10 14 182(2R + 1)

If n = 4 R = 0, 1, 2, 3 4s 4p 4d 4f

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nth no. of max total # e!

shell subshells # e! by in

(n) (= n) designation subshell shell (2n2)

1 1 1s 2 2

2 2 2s, 2p 2+6 8

3 3 3s, 3p, 3d 2+6+10 18

4 4 4s, 4p, 4d, 4f 2+6+10+14 32

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3) Magnetic q.n., mR

Describes orientation of orbital in space

mR = +R, ..., 0, ..., -Rinteger values from +R to -R

# possible values = # orbitals in for mR a subshell

(2R + 1) orbitals in a subshell

Total # orbitals in shell n = n2

orbital contains a max. of 2 e!

max. # e! in subshell = 2 (2R +1)

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a) Ex:

R = 0 mR = 0; s subshell has 1 orbital

max # e!

R subshell # orbitals in subshell

0 s

1 p

2 d

3 f

4 g

5 h

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Energy Levels in the H atom

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VI) Representations of Orbitals

ψ has no direct physical meaning

ψ2 probability density(electron density)

probability of finding e! ata given point in space

(4πr2) ψ2 radial probability density

probability of finding e! at aspecific distance, r, from thenucleus

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A) s orbitals

R = 0 All s orb. are spherical

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1) 3 trends from radial prop. dist.

a) Number of peaks inc. w. inc. n

# peaks = n

most probable distance furtherout & peaks get larger as movefurther from nucleus

b) Number of nodes inc. w. inc. n

points where the prob. is zero

# nodes = n ! 1

# spherical nodes = n ! R ! 1

# angular nodes = R

c) e! density spreads out w. inc. n

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2) Contour Representation

represent a volume of space inwhich there is a high probabilityof finding the e!

usually 90%

1s 2s 3s

e! in orb. of higher n will be greater avg. distance from nucleus

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B) p orbitals

All p orbitals have 2 lobes pointing in opposite directions

dumbbell or teardrop

The 3 p orbs in a subshell differ in their orientation in space

- at right angles to each other

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VII) Many-Electron Atoms

H atom has only 1 e!

Eorb depends on n and isdetermined by attraction betweenpositive proton and negative e! and average distance between them

Many-e! atoms:

Add e! - e! repulsions to E &diff. e!-nucleus attractions

Causes subshells to have diff. E

Eorb now depends on n and R

E of orbitals w/in subshellstill degenerate

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A) Electron Spin

e! “spins” about its own axis

- spinning charge generatesa magnetic field

e! only spin in either of 2 directions

quantized

electron spin q.n., ms

+1/2 !1/2 up down

¼ ¿

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B) Pauli Exclusion Principle

No 2 e! in an atom can havesame set of 4 quantum no.’s

n, R, mR, ms

Look at 1s orbital

n = 1, R = 0, mR = 0

can have only 2 e! w. diff.values of ms, +1/2 or !1/2

Limits max . # e! in orbital to 2

- MUST have opposite spins

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C) Summary of Quantum Numbers

1) Shell number, n

n = 1, 2, 3, 4, .....

energy level & avg. distancePeriod no. Y highest n

Max # e! in shell = 2n2

2) Subshell, R (shape of orbital)

# subshells in shell = n

R = 0, 1, 2, .... (n-1)

s, p, d, f, g, h....

# e! in subshell = 2(2R + 1)

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3) Orbitals, mR (orientation)

mR = +R, ..., 0, ..., -R

# orb. in shell = n2

(2R + 1) orbitals in a subshell

max. # e! in subshell = 2 (2R +1)

4) Spin, ms

+1/2 (¼) !1/2 (¿)

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Subshell letters, # orbitals &max # e! in subshell

R = 0 1 2 3 4 5

subshell letters s p d f g h @@@

# orbitals insubshell

1 3 5 7 9 11 @@@

max # e! insubshell

2 6 10 14 18 22 @@@

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VIII) Electron Configurations

Orbitals filled in order of inc. energy untilall e! have been used

x 7 # e! in subshelln R

_ a shell subshell

1H 1s1

2He 1s2

6C 1s 2s 2p

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A) Ex: Consider sulfur, 16S : 16 e!

16S 1s2 2s2 2p6 3s 3p

valence shell (outer shell)

16S is in 3rd period ; nmax = 3

16S is in group VI A, 6 e! in outer or valence shell

valence e! Y e! in outer orvalence shell

core e! Y e! in inner shells

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Note: For representative elements

Period no. Y n value of valence shell

Group no. Y # of valence e!

Elements in a group have similar chemical and physical properties

- same valence shell e! configuration

e! in outer shell are ones involved inchemical reactions

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B) Shorthand Electron Configuration

Focus attention on valence shell e!

16S 1s2 2s2 2p6 3s2 3p4

completed subshells Y [Ne]noble gas fromprevious period

[Ne] 3s2 3p4

1) Ex: 6C

1s2 2s2 2p2 Y [ ]

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C) Orbital Diagrams

A dash indicates an orbital

Use arrows, ¼or ¿ to indicate e!

with up or down spin

1H 1s1 ¼ ; 2He 1s2 ¼¿ 1s 1s

5 B : 5 e!

1s 2s 2p

[ ] ___ ___ ___ ___ 2s 2p

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single e! in an orbital, ¼ , unpaired

paramagnetic substance

- unpaired e!’s

- attracted by magnetic field

2 e! in same orbital, ¼¿, paired

Diamagnetic substance

- all e! paired

- not attracted by magnetic field

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D) Hund’s Rule

6C : 6 e!

1s2 2s2 2p2 A [He] 2s2 2p2

3 possible orbital diagrams:

[He] ¼¿ ___ ___ ___ paired2s 2p

[He] ¼¿ ___ ___ ___ unpaired 2s 2p diff. spin

[He] ¼¿ ___ ___ ___ unpaired 2s 2p same spin

Hunds Rule: e! occupy diff. orbitals of asubshell until all are singly occupiedbefore e! pairing occurs.

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E) Electron-Dot Symbols

Represent e! in the s & p orb. of thevalence shell as dots arranged aroundthe symbol of the element.

There are 4 s & p orb. & 4 positionsabout the symbol

- treat like orb. diagrams

Note: only real useful for representative elements

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A) Ex’s: Draw e! dot symbols

1) 6C

[He] 2s2 2p2

2) 12Mg

[Ne] 3s2 Mg

3) 16S

[Ne] 3s2 3p4 S

[Ne] ___ ___ ___ ___ 3s 3p

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IX) Electron Conf & Periodic Table

Look at 32Ge

1s2 2s2 2p6 3s2 3p6 4s2 3d10 4p2

n = 4 5s __

4p __ __ __

3d __ __ __ __ __

4s __

n = 3 3p __ __ __

3s __

n = 2 2p __ __ __

2s __

n = 1 1s __

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What was happening?

left, filling s orb right, filling p orb. 2e!, 2 columns 6e!, 6 columns

center, filling d orb 10e!, 10 columns

Period no. A n value of s & p subshells of valence shell

Group no. A # of valence e!

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A) Ex’s:

1) 16S

Period no. Group no.3 VI A

2) 34Se

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IA IIA IIIB IVB VB VIB VIIB VIIIB IB IIB IIIA IVA VA VIA VIIA VIIIA

1 1.008 H 1

4.003 He 2

2 6.941 Li 3

9.012 Be 4

10.81 B 5

12.011 C 6

14.007 N 7

15.999 O 8

18.998 F 9

20.179 Ne 10

3 22.990 Na 11

24.305 Mg 12

26.98 Al 13

28.09 Si 14

30.974 P 15

32.06 S 16

35.453 Cl 17

39.948 Ar 18

4 39.098 K 19

40.08 Ca 20

44.96 Sc 21

47.88 Ti 22

50.94 V 23

52.00 Cr 24

54.94 Mn 25

55.85 Fe 26

58.93 Co 27

58.69 Ni 28

63.546 Cu 29

65.38 Zn 30

69.72 Ga 31

72.59 Ge 32

74.92 As 33

78.96 Se 34

79.904 Br 35

83.80 Kr 36

5 85.47 Rb 37

87.62 Sr 38

88.91 Y 39

81.22 Zr 40

92.91 Nb 41

95.94 Mo 42

98 Tc 43

101.07 Ru 44

102.91 Rh 45

106.42 Pd 46

107.87 Ag 47

112.41 Cd 48

114.82 In 49

118.69 Sn 50

121.75 Sb 51

127.60 Te 52

126.90 I 53

131.39 Xe 54

6 132.91 Cs 55

137.33 Ba 56

138.91 La 57

178.39 Hf 72

180.95 Ta 73

183.85 W 74

186.21 Re 75

190.23 Os 76

192.22 Ir 77

195.08 Pt 78

196.97 Au 79

200.59 Hg 80

204.38 Tl 81

207.2 Pb 82

208.98 Bi 83

209 Po 84

210 At 85

222 Rn 86

7 223 Fr 87

226.03 Ra 88

227.03 Ac 89

261 Rf 104

262 Ha 105

263 Sg 106

262 Ns 107

265 Hs 108

266 Mt 109

269

110

272

111

277

112

6

7

Lanthanide Series

140.12 Ce 58

140.91 Pr 59

144.24 Nd 60

145 Pm 61

150.36 Sm 62

151.96 Eu 63

157.25 Gd 64

158.93 Tb 65

162.50 Dy 66

164.93 Ho 67

167.26 Er 68

168.93 Tm 69

173.04 Yb 70

173.04 Lu 71

Actinide Series

232.04 Th 90

231.04 Pa 91

238.03 U 92

237.05 Np 93

Pu 94

Am 95

Cm 96

Bk 97

Cf 98

Es 99

Fm 100

Md 101

No 102

Lr 103

A PERIODIC CHART OF THE ELEMENTS(Based on 12C)

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3) 43Tc

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4) 82Pb

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B) Exceptions

24Cr expect [Ar] 4s2 3d4

find [Ar] 4s1 3d5

29Cu expect [Ar] 4s2 3d9

find [Ar] 4s1 3d10

Reason: 4s and 3d are very close inenergy. (Can act like degenerate orb)

½ filled & filled subshells are more stable.

68